A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, April 24, 2019
China plastic waste ban throws global recycling into chaos
This photo taken on April 17, 2019 shows recycled paper at the Northern
Adelaide Waste Management Authority's recycling site in Edinburgh, near
Adelaide. From grubby packaging engulfing small Southeast Asian
communities to waste piling up in plants from the US to Australia,
China's ban on accepting the world's used plastic has plunged global
recycling into turmoil. Source: Brenton EDWARDS / AFP

@ascorrespondent-23 Apr 2019
FROM grubby packaging engulfing small Southeast Asian communities to
waste piling up in plants from the US to Australia, China’s ban on
accepting the world’s used plastic has plunged global recycling into
turmoil.
For many years, China received the bulk of scrap plastic from around the
world, processing much of it into a higher quality material that could
be used by manufacturers.
But at the start of 2018, it closed its doors to almost all foreign
plastic waste, as well as many other recyclables, in a push to protect
the local environment and air quality, leaving developed nations
struggling to find places to send their waste.
“It was like an earthquake,” Arnaud Brunet, director general of
Brussels-based industry group The Bureau of International Recycling,
told AFP.
“China was the biggest market for recyclables. It created a major shock in the global market.”
Instead, plastic is being redirected in huge quantities to Southeast Asia, where Chinese recyclers have shifted en masse.
With a large Chinese-speaking minority, Malaysia was a top choice for
Chinese recyclers looking to relocate, and official data showed plastic
imports tripled from 2016 levels to 870,000 tonnes last year.
In the small town of Jenjarom, not far from Kuala Lumpur, plastic
processing plants suddenly appeared in large numbers, pumping out
noxious fumes day and night.
Huge mounds of plastic waste, dumped in the open, piled up as recyclers
struggled to cope with the influx of packaging from everyday goods, such
as foods and laundry detergents, from as far afield as Germany, the
United States, and Brazil.
Residents soon noticed the acrid stench over the town — the kind of
odour that is usual in processing plastic, but environmental campaigners
believe some of the fumes also come from the incineration of plastic
waste that was too low quality to recycle.
“People were attacked by toxic fumes, waking them up at night. Many were
coughing a lot,” local resident, Pua Lay Peng, told AFP.
“I could not sleep, I could not rest, I always felt fatigued,” the 47-year-old added.
Toxic fumes
Pua and other community members began investigating and by mid-2018 had
located about 40 suspected processing plants, many of which appeared to
be operating secretly and without proper permits.
Initial complaints to authorities went nowhere but they kept up
pressure, and eventually the government took action. Authorities started
closing down illegal factories in Jenjarom, and announced a nationwide
temporary freeze on plastic import permits.
Thirty-three factories were closed down, although activists believe many
have quietly moved elsewhere in the country. Residents say air quality
has improved but some plastic dumps remain.
In Australia, Europe and the US, many of those collecting plastic and
other recyclables were left scrambling to find new places to send it.
They face higher costs to get it processed by recyclers at home and in
some cases have resorted to sending it to landfill sites as the scrap
has piled up too quickly.
“Twelve months on, we are still feeling the effects but we have not
moved to the solutions yet,” said Garth Lamb, president of industry body
Waste Management and Resource Recovery Association of Australia.

This picture taken on March 8, 2019 shows plastic waste at an abandoned
factory in Jenjarom, a district of Kuala Langat, outside Kuala Lumpur.
Source: Mohd RASFAN / AFP
Some have been quicker to adapt to the new environment, such as some
local authority-run centres that collect recyclables in Adelaide,
southern Australia.
The centres used to send nearly everything — ranging from plastic to
paper and glass — to China but now 80 percent is processed by local
companies, with most of the rest shipped to India.
“We moved quickly and looked to domestic markets,” Adam Faulkner, chief
executive of the Northern Adelaide Waste Management Authority, told AFP.
“We’ve found that by supporting local manufacturers, we’ve been able to get back to pre-China ban prices,” he added.
Consume less, produce less
In mainland China, imports of plastic waste have dropped from 600,000
tonnes per month in 2016 to about 30,000 a month in 2018, according to
data cited by a new report from Greenpeace and environmental NGO Global
Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives.
Once bustling centres of recycling have been abandoned as firms shifted to Southeast Asia.
On a visit to the southern town of Xingtan last year, Chen Liwen,
founder of environmental NGO China Zero Waste Alliance, found the
once-booming recycling industry had disappeared.
“The plastic recyclers were gone — there were ‘for rent’ signs plastered
on factory doors and even recruitment signs calling for experienced
recyclers to move to Vietnam,” she told AFP.
Southeast Asian nations affected early by the China ban — as well as
Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam were hit hard — have taken steps to limit
plastic imports, but the waste has simply been redirected to other
countries without restrictions, such as Indonesia and Turkey, according
to the Greenpeace report.
With only an estimated nine percent of plastics ever produced recycled,
campaigners say the only long-term solution to the plastic waste crisis
is for companies to make less and consumers to use less.
Greenpeace campaigner Kate Lin said: “The only solution to plastic pollution is producing less plastic.” – Sam Reeves/Agence France-Presse



